Search Videography.com Search the Web
 
Sachtler SOOM Soars on 'Sea to Shining Sea'
June 23, 2010

     

Videographer Ajay Johnson is finishing his edit on Sea to Shining Sea, a documentary following 15-year-old Kimberly Anyadike's dream of piloting a single-engine Red Tail airplane from Compton, Calif., to Newport News, Va. The project, completed in conjunction with Tomorrow's Aeronautical Museum, a flight school and youth mentoring center in Compton, honors the first black U.S. military pilots, the Tuskegee Airmen, and their heroic WWII legacy.

"We shot 600GB of video in five different cities, plus interviews, footage at museums and shots of the plane in various stages of flight," says Johnson. "The Sachtler FSB 6 head and SOOM camera support helped me to get some of the most exciting material I've ever captured."

Johnson appreciated the versatility and low weight of the multifunctional SOOM. "The cool thing about SOOM is that I can use it in a normal tripod configuration, or quickly switch to monopod, baby or HiPod configuration. And it's easy on baggage fees—even with the tripod extended, I could still carry it with two fingers," he says. "Yet it handled the rugged terrain of the Grand Canyon and configured easily when I needed to get over or even snake through a crowd."

While documenting Anyadike's progress across the country, Johnson was constantly on the move. Tracking a landing plane can be tricky. Johnson and camera needed to be steady as he watched and waited to capture the plane on the horizon. He then had to move quickly to the next position to capture Anyadike and the Tuskegee Airmen when the plane hit the ground at various locations across the country. "I would start with the SOOM Tube—the monopod configuration—on the ground extended to eye level, sometimes using the foot plate to stabilize it, then when the plane landed, I'd pick it up and run to the next shot at the meet and greet," he explains.


"When shooting the interviews at Tuskegee Air Museum and the Virginia Air and Space Museum, we shot one-on-one with Kimberly, Chauncey E. Spencer II and Col. Roosevelt Lewis Jr. using the [Sony] EX3 camera and Zeiss DigiPrime lenses. The SOOM's TriPod configuration gave us a height range of over two feet to nearly five feet, so it accommodated each interview," he adds.

"What's more, I often found myself in situations where Kimberly was mobbed on all sides by crowds and press. I put the SOOM in HiPod mode and extended it over their heads," Johnson explains. "I ran video to a small monitor so I could easily see what to shoot even with the HiPod up over eight feet. Another trick I did was switch to SOOM Tube mode and stuck the camera between people's bodies to get the shot. With the remote on the zoom control, I didn't have to keep my hands on the EX3 camera.

"And for some sit-down interviews, the SOOM TriSpread [mid-level spreader] became a single stage baby tripod with a 19-inch height. I placed it on a table, when there was no room for a 'normal' tripod. Before I got the SOOM, I would have had to hold the camera in my lap to make the shot.

"From now on, to get the exciting footage needed for any project I do, the SOOM will be my constant traveling companion, whether I'm shooting through the crowd on a red carpet or aiming the camera to shoot in, over or around a variety of locations and obstacles."

When Johnson is finished editing, Sea to Shining Sea will become two documentaries: one a behind-the-scenes look at the making of, and the other an homage to a young girl's dream of following in the footsteps of the Tuskegee Airmen. They will begin showing the film on the festival circuit to coincide with the release of the George Lucas feature Red Tails.


.




    
Leave a Comment:
 
Text Only 2000 characters limit
Enter the word as it is shown in the box below: (Why?)
(case sensitive)
 
 
FORUMS










 
BLOG
The Video Revolution Will Not Be Televised (On Broadcast or Cable TV) 
Set Up Your YouTube Channel by March 7 
How the Googlization of Television Will Destroy High Wage, Union Hollywood 
Making Video Together: Interview with Spidvid Founder, Jeremy Campbell 
A Conversation with Errol Morris on the Nature of Truth, Photography and Documentary 
The Future of Digital Music Is Video 
Some Thoughts on the Louis CK Experiment 
OTHER NEWS STORIES
Digital Edition
mag